VOTE: The 'BARB'ARIANS of Indian politics

VOTE: The 'BARB'ARIANS of Indian politics

‘Khooni panja’, ‘zeher ki kheti’, ‘impotent’. Political insults have become the order of the day this poll season. While all of them deserve an unequivocal boo, Rediff.com asks readers to pick one that they think stung the most.

As the dog days of May near, the election season is hotting up. It’s all about dirty politics and the war of words, which gets nastier with each passing day.

Politics has gotten personal and beyond. Netas grab every opportunity that comes their way, taking potshots at each other over the past, caste, masculinity, machismo and more. There’s no room for regrets here; an apology is out of the question.

Rediff.com takes a look at some recent barbs that have hit the headlines and asks our readers to vote for the one comment they think is the most spiteful.

'Our allegation is that you are impotent'

The most recent to join the ‘mockery club’ is External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid.

Taking a swipe at the Bharatiya Janata Party’s PM candidate Narendra Modi, Khurshid called him "impotent".

In Khurshid’s words: 'You claim to be such a strong and powerful man and wish to be the PM, but you could not protect the people of Godhra... Are you not a strong man?...Our allegation is not that you get people killed, but that you are napunsak (impotent).'

Though he did not name Modi while addressing a gathering in his Lok Sabha constituency Farukkhabad on Tuesday, there are no prizes for guessing whom the remarks were targeted at.

The BJP promptly demanded an apology, but sorry is not a word to be found in any politician’s, leave alone Khurshid's, dictionary.

Sticking to his remark, Khurshid followed it up on Wednesday with, “I am not his (Modi’s) doctor. I cannot physically examine him. So I have no business to be saying what his physical condition is. The word 'impotent' is used in the political vocabulary to show that somebody is incapable of doing something."

'If Modi wants to distribute tea, we will find a place for him'

It was all started by Samajwadi Party leader Naresh Agarwal last November with his distasteful remark targeting Modi’s distant past.

"Narendra Modi wants to become the PM. But someone rising from a tea shop can never have a national perspective,” he had said.

The slur was branded by Modi himself as ‘anti-poor’. It stoked quite a controversy, but that was a cue Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar clearly seemed to have missed.

At an All India Congress Committee meet in January, Aiyar said, “I promise you in 21st century Narendra Modi will never become the prime minister of the country. ...But if he wants to distribute tea here, we will find a place for him.”

These disdainful comments have only backfired on Modi’s rivals. The BJP used it in its favour and kickstarted the innovative ‘Chai pe Charcha’ initiative to connect with the voters.

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Image: A man holds a paper cup carrying a portrait of Modi during a 'chai pe charcha' initiative in Delhi recentlyPhotographs: Anindito Mukherjee/Reuters

'Where is the comparison between Raja Bhoj and Gangu Teli?'

The battle for 2014 got a casteist hue when Union Health Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad called Modi ‘Gangu Teli’, referring to the community to which the BJP leader belongs.

Quoting a Hindi adage to reject any comparison between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Modi, Azad had wondered, "How can any CM give a challenge to the PM? Where is the comparison between Raja Bhoj and Gangu Teli…"

The comments left the BJP fuming. "Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad has made a casteist aspersion and used casteist remarks against Modi. Calling somebody a Gangu Teli is an insult not only to the OBCs, but practically to the whole country,” party spokesperson Prakash Javdekar said.

BJP indulges in 'zeher ki kheti'

The anxiety surrounding the elections seems to be getting the better of even seasoned politicians like Congress President Sonia Gandhi.

Earlier this month, Sonia launched an attack on the opposition BJP -- accusing the party of indulging in “zeher ki kheti” (sowing seeds of poison) to attain power.

“This is an area which was the ‘karmabhoomi’ of Sufi saints and a symbol of composite culture of the country. I firmly believe that you will not allow those who sow the seeds of poison, who don't believe in secular credentials and who play the politics of instigating violence to succeed,” she said at a public rally in northern Karnataka.

Sonia’s barb is a throwback to a rather pinching remark made by her during an election campaign in Gujarat in 2007, when she referred to Modi as “maut kaa saugadar (merchant of death).”

'BJP practices politics of blood'

Rahul Gandhi is the Congress’s face this election. And if ratcheting up unpleasant rhetoric is the ‘trend’, can he be left behind?

At a rally in Dehardun on Sunday, the Congress VP accused the BJP of practicing “politics of blood” by pitting one religion against another and one caste against another.

“It (BJP) practices politics of blood. They don’t see anything but power… power at any cost. They can pit communities and castes against each other, they won’t hesitate in spilling blood if they find it necessary to usurp power. ” Rahul said.

The ‘politics of blood’ is only the latest among Rahul’s list of jibes against his rivals. In January, Rahul hurt the sentiments of the bald men in the country more than the BJP with his remark, "The opposition can even sell a comb to a bald man".

Modi was in big trouble with the Election Commission over these remarks; they warned him to be more careful in the future.

But that hasn’t deterred Modi from his rant against the Congress. His ‘Jayanthi tax’ jibe was severely criticised.

At a rally in Goa in January, he criticised former environment minister Jayanthi Natrajan's functioning and alleged that all files in the MoEF were pending because of a new levy in Delhi, called 'Jayanthi tax'.

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Image: Modi at the BJP's national council meeting at Ramlila ground in New DelhiPhotographs: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

'Someone who presided over massacre shouldn't be PM'

In this ongoing war of words, a shocker came from Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, whose words are so carefully uttered that it has given birth to a factory of jibes over his silence.

In the strongest ever attack by the PM on Modi, he said at a presser in New Delhi in January, “Someone who presided over the massacre of citizens on the streets of Ahmedabad shouldn't be the PM.”

"Without going into the credentials of anyone, I think it will be disastrous for the country to have Narendra Modi as the PM," Dr Singh said at a media conference where he announced that he would not be in the PM’s race for 2014.

This is the first time Dr Singh has spoken harsh words against Modi, who has often attacked the PM in his speeches.

'I want to spit on faces of Arun Jaitley, Harish Salve'

A red-faced AAP was left with no other choice, especially after Delhi’s former law minister’s controversial comments against BJP leaders.

"I want to spit at the faces of BJP leader Arun Jaitley and senior lawyer Harish Salve to tell them to mend their ways..." Bhrati had said in January reacting to the criticism against the AAP for their protest at Rail Bhavan.